GI SPECIAL 4C11:
PUKING ON
THE HOMELAND:
BUSH VOMITS
AS TRAITORS GATHER IN DC TO SIGN RENEWED POLICE STATE ACT

REUTERS/Jim Young
The traitor
Bush prepares to sign the renewal of the U.S.A. Patriot Act
at the White House March 9, 2006. Bush is joined by fellow
traitors Rep. King (R-NY), and Rep. Sensenbrenner (R-WI).
Seconds
after this photo was taken, Bush vomited copiously on the
table. Presidential staff told reporters Bush had just
learned that 72% of U.S. troops in Iraq want to withdraw
before the end of 2006, 29% are for immediate withdrawal,
and there are rumors that an as yet undetermined number find
his photo useful on firing ranges.
Gold Star
Mother Tells Congress “We Must Withdraw Immediately”
“Please Do
Everything In Your Power To Stop This Insanity And Bring The
Troops Home Now”
David
knew I opposed this war from the start: he said go for
it, and told me to light a candle for him.
2006-03-01 Statement of Tia
Steele, Gold Star Families Speak Out
Testimony provided to: House
Appropriations Sub-Committee on Military Quality of Life and
Veterans Affairs
March 1, 2006 Via David
Swanson, Downing Street.com
Lance
Corporal David Michael Branning was killed in action in
Fallujah, Iraq on November 12, 2004. He was killed when he
and his buddy, Lance Corporal Brian Medina, were ordered to
kick in the door of a private home in that city.
I imagine
that in the last minutes of their lives, they must have
known that there might be people in that dwelling: people
who were defending their home.
These defenders fired on David
and Brian. David was shot in the throat and the bullet
exited his head; he died virtually instantly. Brian bled to
death within minutes. David was 21 years old; Brian was 20.
David was my stepson; he lost
his mother to breast cancer when he was 11. David's father
has lost his only son and David's sister has lost her only
sibling; I have lost one of the most important people I have
ever loved.
Our lives are changed forever;
nothing will ever be the same. At some point after
receiving the word of his death, in the haze of grief, I
remembered the day his father and I said goodbye to David as
he left for boot camp.
David's
Marine recruiter, with a big smile on his face, stuck his
hand out to shake mine, and said, "You'll never have to
worry about him again."
The world would be a much
better place if everyone had a chance to be loved by someone
like David, and to love him back. David was bright,
inquisitive, determined, and impulsive at times; he was a
sketch artist and a sculptor. He read philosophy books; he
carried "War and Peace" with him in Iraq. He didn't enjoy
school and he was a dedicated, dependable employee. He was
based in Hawaii and had learned to surf, sky dive, and rock
climb. He loved working out, and he was consistently
challenging himself. He was the one in the family who made
everyone else laugh.
I am a member of Gold Star
Families Speak Out (GSFSO), an organization of family
members of United States military killed in this war. We
are a chapter within Military Families Speak Out (MFSO), a
3,000 member organization of military families opposed to
the occupation of Iraq. Every single person involved in
these groups has a compelling and powerful story to tell and
we are there to support each other. Speaking out against
this immoral invasion and uniting with other GSFSO and MFSO
members has been a blessing for me. I am grateful that we
are available to each other and continuing to give voice to
the majority of Americans who want the United States out of
Iraq.
Through the support of these
organizations, I have learned that our family is, in a
peculiar way, one of the "lucky" families. We are fortunate
in two ways:
1) We were able to view
David's body in the funeral home when he came back to the
States. We were able to stroke his hair, and touch him, and
hug him, and talk to him, and take photographs of him; his
sister and I were able to take clippings of his hair to keep
with our treasures of him.
2) We are "lucky" because we
learned from first hand accounts just what happened to
David. Ten days after the event, we heard a National Public
Radio report from the field; the journalist mentioned David
and Brian by name and described what happened to them.
Then, as soon as they could after leaving the battlefield,
David's buddies phoned us and told us everything we wanted
to know about the incident in which he was killed. They were
with him when he died. They know exactly where he died and
how he died.
I say we
were "lucky" because I know how other families have fared.
I have met
too many families who weren't as fortunate because 1) they
were not allowed to view their loved one's body, or its
remaining parts, if there were any, and 2) they cannot get
complete and truthful answers about how their loved one
died.
Some of
these families have communicated repeatedly with the
military seeking answers to their questions. Some have
received revised versions of their loved one's death, weeks
and months after the fact.
In one particular instance, a
family was told that their son committed suicide in Iraq -
something they found impossible to believe. Almost two
years later they were notified that in fact he had not
committed suicide, but was killed by a fellow soldier. The
horror of such experiences is exceeded only by the singular
experience of losing a loved one in a war based on lies and
perpetuated by greed.
I ask you to imagine this:
think of the person you love most in this world.
Imagine that person is taken
away from you forever, destroyed because of lies and
betrayal. Imagine that they had their whole life ahead of
them, and that that life is now gone forever.
David knew
I opposed this war from the start: he said go for it, and
told me to light a candle for him.
David was too young to
comprehend his own mortality; that is why young people die
in wars, thanks to old people who send them there.
My mission
since David's death is to do all that I can to stop the
madness that is sending more innocents to their unnecessary
deaths.
We have no
acceptable reasons for staying the course in Iraq. We must
withdraw immediately.
We owe it to our military
people, to the people of Iraq and the United States, and to
our severely damaged reputation in the world.
Please do
everything in your power to stop this insanity and bring the
troops home now.
The soul of
this country is being eaten away: do the honorable thing,
and stop the unnecessary slaughter and deception.
Do you
have a friend or relative in the service? Forward this
E-MAIL along, or send us the address if you wish and
we’ll send it regularly.
Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the USA, this is
extra important for your service friend, too often cut
off from access to encouraging news of growing
resistance to the war, at home and inside the armed
services.
Send requests to address up top.
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
Marine
Killed In Fallujah Car Bombing
March 10, 2006 Associated
Press, BAGHDAD, Iraq & Reuters
A truck bomb ripped through a
line of cars at a checkpoint in Fallujah.
A Marine,
three members of one Iraqi family and an Iraqi soldier were
killed, the American military said. Five policemen were
killed
The bomb exploded in Fallujah
as large numbers of cars were waiting to pass through the
security checkpoint going into the city.
The death
of the Marine raised to at least 2,306 members of the U.S.
military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in
March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
Three
Wisconsin Soldiers Wounded
March 10, 2006 The Associated
Press
Three
soldiers from a Wisconsin Army National Guard unit are
injured in an explosives attack in Iraq.
The National Guard said the
three soldiers were assigned to the Second Battalion, 127th
Infantry. They were hurt Thursday during a convoy security
mission.
Lt. Col. Tim Donovan said the
family members of the soldiers have been notified.
He said the soldiers' injuries
are not believed to be life-threatening.
The 127th Infantry includes
soldiers from the Merrill and Antigo National Guard armories
and from other parts of the state.
The unit
arrived in the Middle East in late summer and provides armed
escorts to military and civilian convoys moving supplies in
Iraq.
“The Rate
Of Insurgent Attacks Against Coalition And Iraqi Forces
Generally Has Grown Each Month”
“Only” 25% Are Effective [!]
March 06, 2006, By Gordon
Lubold, Army Times staff writer [Excerpts]
Insurgent
attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq are rising, not falling,
according to Pentagon data recently declassified for a
congressional hearing.
The data show how insurgent
activity ebbs and flows as the enemy conducts attacks, falls
back for a time and then regroups to battle coalition forces
anew.
All this
points to an insurgency that is growing rather than waning,
said Joseph Christoff, director of international affairs and
trade for the Government Accountability Office, the
investigative arm of Congress.
The rate of
insurgent attacks against coalition and Iraqi forces
generally has grown each month, according to a rough
calculation based on the chart in Christoff’s written
testimony.
For example, the average of
about 1,200 attacks per month in 2004 grew to about 1,600
attacks in 2005, including a record of about 2,300 attacks
in October, according to the data, provided by
Multi-National Corps-Iraq and Multi-National Forces-Iraq.
The highest
number of attacks occurs in or around Baghdad,
with five or more reported daily, according to a graphic
provided by Multi-National Forces-Iraq.
Only about 25 percent of the attacks are
defined as effective, measured by whether they caused
significant damage to property, or injury or death to a U.S.
service member or member of the coalition forces, he said.
[That’s not an “only,” that’s a very high rate of effective
attacks. What the fuck is this “only” shit?]
REAL BAD
PLACE TO BE:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

A
U.S. soldier at the scene of a car bomb attack in Baghdad
March 9, 2006. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
TROOP NEWS
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME;
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW, ALIVE

The casket containing Army
Spc. Thomas J. Wilwerth is carried at Calverton National
Cemetery in Calverton, N.Y., Tuesday, March 7, 2006.
Wilwerth died in Iraq last month when an improvised bomb
exploded near a Bradley armored vehicle he was riding. (AP
Photo/Ed Betz)
Students
Write To Wounded Brazoswood Grad
March 4, 2006 By Jen Sansbury,
The Facts, RICHWOOD
Navy Petty Officer Brandon
Crocker, a 2002 graduate of Brazoswood High School, is being
treated for war wounds in a Maryland hospital this week.
He’s also being treated as a
hero by students at Gladys Polk Elementary School in
Richwood, where his younger brother, Steven, attends
school. Students throughout the school have made get-well
cards to cheer up Crocker while he recovers.
“Im happy yore still alive,”
wrote Espy Acevedo, who is in Steven’s second-grade class.
The 21-year-old medic, who was
attached to a Marine unit, was injured Feb. 25 in a battle
in Iraq.
His father, Scott Crocker of
Richwood, said his son was pulled out of the line of fire by
another member of his platoon.
“Both of them were trying to
repair damaged soldiers while being shot at, and with bullet
holes in them,” he said. “He was shot and he still went
through the canal, got my son and drug him out of fire.”
Crocker said he learned of
Brandon’s injury Monday morning when a family member who had
heard from a chain of relatives called him. He said he
already had an inkling something had happened.
“When I saw the news the night
before about five getting killed and three wounded, usually
I can look at it and go, ‘It’s not my son,’ but this time I
got one of those parental feelings that something wasn’t
right and I was up until 4 a.m.,” Crocker said. “I finally
decided it must not be him because I hadn’t gotten a phone
call. Then six hours later, I did.”
Brandon was taken to Germany,
where he was stabilized before being taken to the Naval
hospital in Bethesda, Md. Scott Crocker and his wife, Greta,
flew up there Tuesday.
“When I came in Tuesday night
to see him, he could hardly reach his arm around me and
today he’s walking around,” Crocker said. “He’s doing better
and getting stronger every day.”
Brandon was shot from behind
in the upper left shoulder and the bullet apparently tumbled
and pierced his lung, his father said. Another bullet hit
his body armor, leaving fragments in his back, Crocker
said. He said doctors are still determining whether to
remove them.
“He did have surgery and they
took a portion of one of his lungs because they couldn’t
repair it,” he said.
Brandon knew in high school
that he wanted to go into the medical field to help people,
say those who know him.
“He was
into anything that was medical,” his father said. “He just
never thought he was going to be on the receiving end of
it.”
Brandon participated in a
program that allowed him to spend time with Lake Jackson
EMS, said Polk physical education coach Marjorie Berry, a
Lake Jackson firefighter and former member of the EMS.
“He did not have the training
yet, but he went to meetings and we helped him to learn
basic things that they’re … allowed to do as long as they’re
riding with another crew that has everything that’s required
by the state,” she said. “I know he was very eager and very,
very helpful with anything we asked him to assist us with.”
Once Brandon is released from
the Bethesda hospital, he initially will go to Tampa, Fla.,
with his mother and stepfather to continue his recovery,
because he can be closer to a military hospital there, Scott
Crocker said. After that, Brandon will come home to Texas
for awhile.
Scott Crocker, a volunteer
firefighter in Richwood, and his wife own Cleaning Plus. The
family has three children in Brazosport ISD schools.
Eight-year-old Steven said he
loves to play video games with his big brother, especially a
military game about Vietnam. Steven said he tends to win.
“He doesn’t really have any
practice,” he said of Brandon.
The two also used to jog
together to a church near their house, he said.
Steven said he thinks Brandon
will like the cards made by Polk students.
Fellow second-grader Alex
Martinez, 9, said he was sad when he heard about what
happened to Brandon. The card he made Friday featured a
drawing of the two brothers together.
The cards are being sent to
Maryland in waves by their grandmother, Sue Wheeler of Lake
Jackson, a regular volunteer at Polk.
“Anything for ‘Grandma Sue,’”
said Kathy Reed, Steven’s teacher.
Wheeler said she was shocked
when she first heard Brandon had been shot and has prayed
for him intently.
“We feel like we have been
blessed that he’s in good shape,” she said. “He’s a
survivor, he really is. He’s a great kid.”
“Those
Troops That Are Over There Don't Have Any Need To Go, Suffer
So Far Away”
“Activists
Here Call Ramos ‘The Cindy Sheehan Of El Salvador’”
[Thanks to Phil G, who sent
this in.]
March 10, 2006 By Héctor Tobar
and Alex Renderos, Special to The L.A. Times
GUAYAMANGO, El Salvador
The only
thing Herminia Ramos wanted from the army was her son's
pension, exactly $200 a month. She figured she deserved
the money now, seeing how he gave his life wearing an army
uniform, fighting in a war halfway around the world in Iraq.
The
Salvadoran army said no.
Ramos said she felt
abandoned. Left with her thoughts in her sparse cinderblock
home, and five other children to support, she quickly came
to a conclusion: No other parent should have to feel this
way.
She signed
her name to a letter demanding that El Salvador remove its
troops from Iraq. Then she personally delivered it to the
national legislature and the offices of conservative
President Tony Saca. In the process, the quiet peasant has
become the most potent symbol of this country's small
antiwar movement.
"There are
other mothers who have their children there, and I didn't
want them to suffer the pain I did," Ramos said, and began
to weep. "Those troops that are over there don't have any
need to go, suffer so far away."
El Salvador is the only Latin
American country with troops still in Iraq. About 380
soldiers from the country's elite Cuscatlan Battalion have
been stationed there since 2003.
Two Salvadoran soldiers have
died in Iraq. Ramos' 19-year-old son, Natividad Mendez
Ramos, was the first, falling in the southern city Najaf on
April 4, 2004, when supporters of the anti-U.S.
[translation: anti U.S.
occupation]
cleric Muqtada Sadr attacked Salvadoran and
Spanish troops at a barracks there.
Natividad had joined the army
when he was 15, having somehow gotten around the minimum age
requirement of 16. Pictures in Ramos' home show a young man
with coffee colored skin who looks older than the teenager
he was.
Ramos remembers the last time
she saw Natividad, when he came home on leave, just before
leaving for Iraq, and the pain of one of their last
conversations together:
"He told me, 'Mama, I think
this is the last time we're going to see each other.' And I
answered him: 'No, no, son. You don't have to go. You're
not going to go. I don't want you to go!' My son was
disconsolate. He told me, 'You're going to be left all
alone.' "
Polls here show a majority of
Salvadorans oppose the presence of their country's troops in
Iraq, but antiwar protests are almost nonexistent.
"Herminia's actions have
reopened the debate about our troops in Iraq, an issue that
had almost been forgotten," said Maria Silvia Guillen, who
runs a legal rights center in San Salvador.
Activists here call Ramos "the
Cindy Sheehan of El Salvador."
When Ramos contacted a local
minister about her concerns over the war, peace activists
drafted a letter of protest in her name.
"I consider
her to be one of our Salvadoran heroines," said Bishop
Medardo Gomez of the Lutheran Church of El Salvador. "She
is a poor woman of few words whose pain led her to speak
out. She's dared to stand up to the powerful, to our
government and, above all, to the military."
The Salvadoran government, the
protest letter said, has become "an accomplice to a military
occupation that violates the fundamental laws of this
country and a co-participant in widely denounced human
rights violations."
Shortly after Ramos delivered
her letter last month, Saca was asked by reporters whether
he had any response, as a new contingent of Salvadoran
troops was about to be deployed to Iraq.
"One of the risks is that a
person can die, which we regret deeply," the president said.
"We've supported Mrs. Ramos, we respect her opinion. But
the battalion is going to Iraq."
After his death, Natividad was
declared a "national hero" by then-President Francisco
Flores. The army paid out a $7,000 life insurance policy.
Natividad's body arrived in Guayamango by helicopter for
burial in a solemn ceremony covered by national television.
Soldiers
also came and built the cinderblock house, which is the envy
of many in a rural community where most of the houses are
built from adobe mud bricks. But the life insurance money
ran out a long time ago ; as a single mother of five
children, it's hard for Ramos to make ends meet.
Military
officials told Ramos, 47, that she would not be able to
receive her son's pension until she turned 55.
"In eight years, a lot of
things can happen," she said. "I have needs now."
After she
delivered her protest letter to the president, a group of
army officials showed up at her home.
"They told
me, 'Send as many letters as you want, but the troops are
still leaving.' I answered them, 'I don't want those troops
to go.' "
Many countries that were once
part of what President Bush called "the coalition of the
willing" have since withdrawn their troops from Iraq,
including Spain, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican
Republic.
Napoleon Campos, a political
analyst in San Salvador, says he thinks Salvadoran troops
will remain in Iraq for the foreseeable future.
"The troops in Iraq have
become a kind of straitjacket that El Salvador can't take
off," Campos said. "Everything indicates that we'll be with
the United States until they leave from there, either
victorious or defeated."
Wounded
Iraq Troops Fucked Over As Usual By Lying VA Scum:
Not Usual:
This Time, The Liars Got Caught
In
Atlanta, one veteran who the VA said got an appointment
within a week actually waited nearly a year. Another
veteran in Boston who reported seeing a VA doctor within
hours actually waited 472 days.
Getting
to the nearest Veterans Administration hospital that can
best treat his paralysis means a three-hour roundtrip,
and the VA isn't paying for therapists closer to home.
So he does without.
March 9, 2006 ABC News' Erin
Hayes filed this report for "World News Tonight" [Excerpts]
DONNA, Texas
Eugene Simpson doesn't like to
complain. Paralyzed in a bomb attack in Iraq, his initial
care was excellent, but ever since then he has felt adrift.
"There are thousands of
soldiers in worse condition than I am, and they're OK," he
said. "They're making it."
Getting to
the nearest Veterans Administration hospital that can best
treat his paralysis means a three-hour roundtrip, and the VA
isn't paying for therapists closer to home. So he does
without.
"I want to excel and advance
and get stronger," said Simpson. "But at the same time, I
don't want to pull a muscle or do the wrong exercise that
can hurt a certain part of my body, because then I'll be
helpless."
In Texas, a
group of veterans staged a protest march covering the
distance to the nearest VA hospital: 250 miles.
"(It takes)
four-and-a-half to five hours .. one way," said Vietnam War
vet Polo Uriesti.
"Last year, 97 percent of
veterans who came to us for a primary care appointment got
that appointment within 30 days, and 95 percent of those who
came for an acute care appointment got it within 30 days,"
said R. James Nicholson, secretary of Veterans Affairs.
But an
inspector general's audit found real problems with the way
the VA has come up with those numbers.
The audit found that some VA
staff, feeling "pressured," actually fudged
[translation: deliberately
lied about] the numbers, and error rates
translation: rates of lying
to government inspectors] were as high as 61
percent.
In Atlanta,
one veteran who the VA said got an appointment within a week
actually waited nearly a year.
Another
veteran in Boston who reported seeing a VA doctor within
hours actually waited 472 days.
[OK, got it
by now? It’s only been 3 years. There is no enemy in
Iraq. Iraqis and U.S. troops have a common enemy, the
Imperial politicians in Washington DC. The conclusion:
obvious. Fight the enemy, together. T]
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT THE NEW TRAVELING SOLDIER
Telling
the truth - about the occupation or the criminals
running the government in Washington - is the first
reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more
than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance
- whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or
inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling
Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class
people inside the armed services together. We want this
newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize
resistance within the armed forces. If you like what
you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in
building a network of active duty organizers.
http://www.traveling-soldier.org/
And join
with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and
bring our troops home now! (www.ivaw.net)
“Press
Conferences With Donny Rum Are Wonderfully Reminiscent Of
The Five O'Clock Follies”
08 March 2006 By Molly Ivins,
Truthdig.com
But, Brother Rumsfeld warns
us, "We do know that their goal is to try to break the will;
that they consider the center of gravity of this; not to be
in Iraq, because they know they can't win a battle out
there; they consider it to be in Washington, D.C., and in
London and in the capitals of the Western world."
I'm sorry, I know we are not
allowed to use the V-word in relation to Iraq, because so
many brilliant neocons have assured us this war is nothing
like Vietnam (Vietnam, lotsa jungle; Iraq lotsa sand; big
difference).
But you
must admit that press conferences with Donny Rum are
wonderfully reminiscent of the Five O'Clock Follies, those
wacky but endearing daily press briefings on Southeast Asia
by military officers who made Baghdad Bob sound like a
pessimist.
Rumsfeld's performance was so
reminiscent of all the times the military in Vietnam blamed
the media for reporting "bad news'" when there was nothing
else to report.
A briefing officer once
memorably asked the press, "Who's side are you on?"
You could rely on other
sources.
For
example, the Pentagon is still investigating itself to find
out why it is paying American soldiers to make up good news
about the war, which it then passes on to a Republican
public relations firm, which in turn pays people in the
Iraqi media to print the stuff; thus fooling the Iraqis or
somebody.
When last heard from, the
general in charge of investigating this federally funded
Baghdad Bobism said he hadn't found anything about it to be
illegal yet, so it apparently continues.
How Bad Is
It?
3.8.06 By David Rogers, Wall
St. Journal
For Senate
Budget Committee Chairman Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, an
early ally of Mr. Bush, the result is a total defense budget
that in real dollars surpasses those of the Vietnam War era
and defense buildup under Ronald Reagan at the height of the
Cold War.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action

A
damaged police vehicle after a roadside bomb attack in
Baghdad March 8, 2006.
Two policemen were killed in the attack, police said.
REUTERS/Mahmoud Raouf Mahmoud
March 10, 2006 AEDT & WorldNow
& By BUSHRA JUHI (AP) & Reuters
A roadside
bomb exploded as a police patrol was driving through west
Baghdad, killing two officers and wounding four, police
said.
A policeman
in Tikrit died disarming a roadside bomb when a second
explosive device detonated, also wounding four others.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
Got That
Right
March 10, 2006 American
Progress Report
Two years
after his promise to shut down Abu Ghraib prison, Bush will
finally do so.
One Iraqi
shopkeeper noted, "Closing Abu Ghraib will never improve the
image of the Americans in Iraq. I believe the Americans
will close one Abu Ghraib and open a hundred new ones
somewhere else."
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“IEDs
Remain Top Killer of Troops in Iraq”
[Headline
From Associated Press Mar 10]
[Thanks to
PB, who sent this in. He writes: WRONG - GEORGE W. BUSH,
THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF, REMAINS THE TOP KILLER OF TROOPS IN
IRAQ. TOP KILLER OF IRAQIS TOO.]
Veteran Writes:
“We Now
Have Become An Agressor Country”
March 10, 2006 firebase-chat
[Excerpts]
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006
6:38 PM
Subject: Re: Hit with another
Claymore at SEARS
[Letter
#1:]
From: BP
Date: 2 Mar 2006
Subject: Hit with another
Claymore at SEARS
This might not be how some
Vietnam Veterans feel, but as far as I am concerned, it is
another kick in the ass for all of us.
Today I went to SEARS
(Kingsport Tennessee) to buy some shirts to be embodied for
our Reunion in July and I picked out two that I thought were
ok. When I got home, I looked at the tag inside and it said
"MADE IN VIETNAM"!!!
They went back as fast as I
could get it there. The Lady at the register asked me what
was wrong with them and I said I am a Vietnam Combat Veteran
and it is another slap in the face to the Guy's that fought
over there as far as I was concerned. She was very nice and
said She understood exactly what I was saying and that She
does not blame me for returning them.
I will never buy any thing
from SEARS again. Please pass this on so another Viet Vet
does not make the same mistake and drive home and be
Ambushed again here in the States
What the Tag should of said,
is "MADE IN AMERICA"! What is happening to this Country of
ours?
BP
1st Bn 5th Infantry Reg. 25th
ID Class of 1966
Squad Leader, Tunnel Rat &
Pointman
[Letter
#2:]
From: S
My Brothers and Sisters,
As much as
I can see your point about buying anything from a country
you fought in at best can be hard to do much less look upon
someone from that country.
But it is
like those of us who fought or presently fighting in the
Gulf not to buy gas or oil.
I think our battle is not with
a country we fought in, now, but with those who are in
office to who allow our country to be so easily invaded by
these and other countries.
My Father like many fought in
Germany, Korea, My brother in Vietnam, my uncles against
Japan and I fought in the Gulf War.
But everyday I see BMW's,
Honda and every other type of suckies and this is not to
include jobs lost because of being move over there.
As a
Veterans Employment Representative, I see veterans like you
and everyone else who hurt from false leaders who claim to
represent us "We the People."
These false
leader continually fail to do their jobs, because in my
opinion lobbyists swaying the vote.
Oh, I stand
corrected, except during an election year when their jobs
are on the line.
When I see
laws change to protect big business and go against us, We
the people," it really chaps my backside.
So the battle I see we have is
with those who are blind and fail to act on our behalf but
act against us," We the People" who voted their a_ _ into
office.
Don't miss
understand me, I am not blaming one party. Oh hell no, I am
blaming every damn last one who will not stand up and say NO
MORE.
I Blame
every last one who will not reach down and grab a pair, if
they can, and say we represent the people of this country,
not the lobbyist and not big business.
There use to be a joke about
50,000 lawyers, well it should be about politicians.
Our laws need to be changed to
end lobbyist and anyone/thing that will sway the vote
against us, once and for all.
If
politicians want to be bought off by big business give them
jail time and take Everything away from them house, bank
accounts and everything else. They would not have got it
unless they were in office so take it all, just like the
legal system would do under the Rico act against the Mafia.
So, I guess
if this is not the battle and you still want to fight
against sears, then you should include Walmart, Kmart and
every other store in this country.
Hell want a better one; the
berets our soldiers are wearing, take a guess where they are
made. I will give you a hint, Its not the Good Old US.
S
[Letter
#3:]
From: CW
S, i agree with you!
4 yrs in nam, and feel its not
the people of viet nam that we should be attacking! but our
leaders for outsourcing the jobs in the first place!
in world war 2 our leaders
allowed the Japanese to attack our country!
viet nam,
iraq nor afghanistan attacked us!!!!
we now have
become an agressor country, no better than germany nor
japan!!
What do you think?
Comments from service men and women, and veterans, are
especially welcome. Send to
thomasfbarton@earthlink.net. Name, I.D., withheld on
request. Replies confidential.
“Promoting
Officers To Elevated Ranks Who Evince A Cowardly Lack Of
Integrity And Accountability”
March 10, 2006 by Gregory D.
Foster, International Herald Tribune (Paris) [Excerpts]
Having taught for two decades
at the National Defense University in Washington, I have
grown mind numbingly accustomed to hearing the future
generals and admirals who are our students disparage what
they are convinced is the decadence of American society.
I also have listened time and
again to their complaints about having to unnecessarily
endure ethics and leadership instruction at their advanced
level of experience and achievement.
They
consider themselves ethically pure, gifted even, yet they
see no contradiction in the gross ethical failings of their
superiors, whom they venerate and are about to emulate.
Ironically, they cluelessly
mistake their own pronounced moral arrogance for the true
moral superiority expected of them.
The U.S. military deserves
blame as an institution for sustaining a culture that
condones, if not encourages, undisciplined, dehumanizing,
sadistic, even murderous behavior by at least some of its
troops.
It deserves
even more blame for rewarding and promoting officers to
elevated ranks who evince a cowardly lack of integrity and
accountability, as well as a disgusting penchant for finger
pointing they would decry in their political overlords, that
is, if they themselves hadn't been completely politicized.
When was
the last time we witnessed a senior military officer
willingly accept blame for a catastrophe that occurred on
his watch (Beirut, Khobar Towers, the U.S.S. Cole, Abu
Ghraib), or one who resigned on principle?
The answer
lies in the deafening silence we hear.
“Obstruct
The Administration Of The Bush Government”
March 10, 2006 Cindy Sheehan,
BuzzFlash [Excerpts]
When the four of us. Missy
Beattie, Rev. Patricia Ackerman, Medea Benjamin, and I, were
arrested the other day, I was singled out for federal police
brutality. The other three ladies were picked up, not
gingerly, though, and I was dragged across the pavement and
treated very, very roughly, having both arms wrenched out
from beneath me.
I looked to my doctor as if I
had been beaten.
My
daughter, Janey, asked if I had been resisting arrest, I
told her if one considers going into a fetal position and
saying, "Please don't hurt me anymore!" resisting, then I
guess I was.
A book
could be written about the felonies of the Bush Crime Family
and their mafia-style buddies, but I am running out of
space.
George Bush has committed
crimes against humanity and high crimes and misdemeanors in
his tenure as (P)resident of the White House.
Has he been
held accountable for any of this? No, he spends his nights
and days comfortable and content in the fact that he is a
lame duck, already rich, and knowing that Congress is
spineless and he won't be impeached for his transgressions
that have caused the deaths of so many thousands of people
worldwide.
When we were in the cockroach
and feces decorated jail system in NYC the other night, we
met some other women who felt they had to resort to crime to
try to survive in BushWorld.
We met intelligent young women
who felt their last resort was to resort to victimless
crimes. Now for their petty thefts, they will have to spend
months in institutions where they are stripped of any human
dignity or comfort.
All of the women we met knew
they broke the law and were resigned to their punishment but
where is the justice in our system where all people are
supposedly equal?
However, we
four white, middle-class women were the lucky ones.
We only had
to spend one night in jail and we knew our lawyers would be
there in the morning to spring us.
When we
were heading for court, we walked by our sisters in the
holding cell and our hearts sank, because we know what it is
like to spend even one night in jail.
Our souls also connected with
our sisters and brothers all over the world who are
imprisoned in far worse conditions by the policies of BushCo
and are being inhumanely tortured by these same medieval and
draconian policies.
Even if John Bolton, L. Paul
Bremer, George Bush, Halliburton execs, etc. ad nauseum are
ever punished, we all know the conditions won't be (but
should be) as harsh as those of the other people who live in
subhuman conditions because of them.
These
people operate on the standard of having all the money and
all the power and they don't care for anyone who they
victimize on their way to obtaining their obscene and
ill-gotten gains.
One of our
so-called crimes in front of USUN was "Obstructing
Governmental Administration."
I say
"Hell, yes! Anyone with a conscience or any moral courage
should be doing everything in his/her power to obstruct the
administration of the Bush government.
OCCUPATION
REPORT
Silly
Occupation Commanders Fake Handing Over Sadr City To
Collaborator Forces:
“The Police
Forces In The Neighborhood Are Symbolic And Have No Courage”
“The Army
Does Not Enter Sadr City”
While
U.S. officers insist Iraqis are now taking the lead in
securing Sadr City, both sides concede American soldiers
will likely be there for some time to come. “I expect
there will be an American presence until the government
and military command recognize these units to be fully
capable to operate on their own,
which is the exit strategy that everyone is
talking about,” said Maj. Charles St. Clair, part of the
U.S. team that will continue to advise the Iraqi
battalion after the handover.
March 10, 2006 By Alexandra
Zavis, Associated Press, BAGHDAD, Iraq
On a sandy field shrouded in a
dust storm, the red flag of the 3rd Battalion, 2nd Brigade,
6th Iraq Army Division passed from American to Iraqi hands,
and with it, control of one of Baghdad’s most restive
districts. [Except, as
noted below, this is all a fantasy.]
“Iraqis know Iraqis,” Col.
Hussain Muhsein, commander of the 3rd Battalion, said. “We
can handle the security inside Sadr City.”
Residents,
however, are far less certain about the abilities of their
new army and police force.
Saadoun
al-Sahl, a furniture shop owner, said he counted on private
militiamen loyal to Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to shield
him from a recent surge of sectarian killing that pushed
Iraq to the brink of civil war.
“They
protect us better than any security agency,” he said. “If I
or anyone has a problem, we go to the Mahdi Army to solve
it.”
“The police
forces in the neighborhood are symbolic and have no
courage,” said al-Sahl, the furniture shop owner.
“The army
does not enter Sadr City. Sometimes we see checkpoints
outside the (district), but not all the time.”
Muhsen’s main concern was the
shortage of armored vehicles to protect his soldiers in a
city that suffers near-daily bombings, mortar fire and other
attacks.
Four new, U.S.-provided,
upgraded armored Humvees complete with air conditioning and
an Iraqi flag painted on the side were proudly displayed at
Thursday’s ceremony. But most of the battalion still patrol
the streets in pickup trucks mounted with heavy guns.
Security was tight for the event, which took place just days
after the division commander was slain by gunmen
[translation: resistance troops].
Journalists were brought in an armored bus, escorted by
Bradley fighting vehicles. Iraqi police kept the route
clear, backing up traffic for miles.
While U.S.
officers insist Iraqis are now taking the lead in securing
Sadr City, both sides concede American soldiers will likely
be there for some time to come.
“I expect
there will be an American presence until the government and
military command recognize these units to be fully capable
to operate on their own,
which is the exit strategy that everyone is
talking about,” said Maj. Charles St. Clair, part of the
U.S. team that will continue to advise the Iraqi battalion
after the handover. [In his dreams maybe. The troops will
decide how long they wish to stay, and may make their wishes
known in ways St. Clair will find most unpleasant.]
[As for
now, you can’t hand over what you ain’t got.]
OCCUPATION
HAITI
“It's No
Secret That The Real Power Calling The Shots In Haiti Is Not
In Port-Au-Prince”
“It's In
Washington”
March 3, 2006 Stephen Lendman,
Uruknet.info [Excerpts]
On February 7, 2006 (and with
due homage to the great Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano)
the people of Haiti were not to be denied. Few people
anywhere have endured more oppression and human misery or
for a longer period of time (with all too few periods of
relief).
In spite of an election
process orchestrated, controlled and shamelessly rigged by
an interim puppet government (the IGH) and an oppressive
occupying force (UN Blue Helmets supposedly there to
maintain order and protect them), they overcame overwhelming
obstacles and elected Rene Preval for the second time as
their President (his first time in office was from
1996-2000).
It's no
secret that the real power calling the shots in Haiti is not
in Port-au-Prince. It's in Washington making policy, giving
orders and letting its approved proxies do its bidding,
which has been bloody and brutal since US Marines in the
dead of night kidnapped and deposed democratically elected
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide at gunpoint in February,
2004.
From behind
the scenes, the Washington Chimeres, led by the Haiti
Democracy Project (HDP), that is umbilically linked to the
US State Department, and its former member and now acting US
ambassador Timothy Carney are already sharpening their long
knives and beginning their demonization and destabilization
campaign to undermine the Preval administration even before
it begins.
They hope to render it
stillborn or at least so falsely tarnished and weakened by a
torrent of propaganda it will be unable to function
effectively. And if doesn't, they'll blame it on him.
And the US
corporate media is playing its business as usual part to
help guarantee it won't.
It's
unleashed a storm of anti-Preval propaganda, disinformation
and demonization in the aftermath of the February 7
election. It began by playing the old game of "blame the
victim."
Although
the US and its obedient proxies shamelessly controlled and
rigged the election and still failed to have it come out
their way, they're blaming Preval for the flawed process and
electoral fraud.
Neither he,
any Lavalas remnants or ordinary poor Haitians had anything
to do with burning ballots, hiding them, destroying tally
sheets or stuffing ballot boxes with blank ballots. Nor did
they decide to reduce the number of polling stations from
12,000 in 2000 to about 800 or less this year. And the ones
they eliminated were where the majority of poor Haitians
lived in rural areas as well as urban
Lavalas/Aristide/Preval strongholds like Cite Soleil where
they had NONE AT ALL.
Governing Haiti under the best
of conditions would be a task to challenge the patience of
Job, require the wisdom of Solomon and have the luck of a
"riverboat gambler" on his best day. But the way things are
now as Rene Preval prepares to do it, he may be lucky just
to stay alive and keep his sanity and blood pressure under
control.
On day one
in office he'll be virtually alone trying to govern a
country still run by criminals under the aegis and with full
support of the US. The Haitian peoples' leaders and
advocates are in exile, prison or are dead, the country is
in desperate need of development, and at least 80% of the
people are in an even more desperate state but hoping Rene
will be their savior. Those people need everything
including food for their next meal.
The
knowledgeable, thoughtful and keen observer of events in
Haiti for many years, John Maxwell, wrote just before the
2004 coup how abused this small country (3 times the size of
Los Angeles) and its people have been for so many years.
Referring only to the 20th century (he might have included 4
others) he wrote: "The.........story of Haiti is one of
economic and social strip-mining, of rapacious exploitation
on a scale that is almost incomprehensible (the crime of
genocide in slow motion).......Haiti is an international
crime scene......For decades Haitians have been driven
abroad for some sort of dignity, livelihood and an end to
suffering.
“The
brightest, including journalists, have been murdered or are
in voluntary or involuntary exile.......Haiti is a war zone,
where the rich (from the US and Haiti mainly) have scorched
the earth so thoroughly......."